Part2: My ex-husband’s new wife showed up at my father’s house right after he was buried and told me, “Start packing.” While I was trimming the garden roses, I let her talk… until she made the mistake that would destroy her

I gripped my shears so tightly that my knuckles turned white and my fingers began to ache. My dad always said that roses should be treated firmly but never cruelly, because even the sharpest thorns have a purpose.

“Get off my property, Misty,” I told her, “before I forget how to be polite to a guest.”

She let out a short, dry chuckle that grated on my nerves.

“Your property? How sweet of you to think that you can keep this fortune all for yourself while the rest of us just sit back and watch.”

“My father built every inch of this house and planted every tree with his own hands, so this isn’t just about money to me.”

“Wake up, because everything in this world is about money,” she snapped back at me. “Tomorrow you are going to learn that lesson the hard way.”

She turned to leave, but before she passed through the garden gate, she delivered one final, cruel blow.

“You really should start packing, because Simon and I are going to remodel the second we move in. We are going to start by ripping out these old-fashioned rosebushes since everything here needs a more modern look.”

Her heels clicked away down the stone path until she disappeared from sight. I looked down at the white flowers and realized I had accidentally crushed several delicate petals with my muddy hand.

I pulled out my phone and dialed a number I knew by heart.

Part 2
“Attorney Brenda, it’s me,” I said the moment she picked up the call. “Misty just came here to threaten me.”

Her professional tone shifted instantly to one of deep concern.

“What exactly did she say to you, Cassandra?”

“She said exactly what we were afraid of, so I need to know if you can come over right now.”

“I am on my way,” she replied firmly, “and you shouldn’t worry because your father thought much further ahead than any of them.”

After I hung up, I noticed something caught under the leaves of a rosebush. It was a small envelope, damp with the morning dew and covered in my father’s unmistakable handwriting.

It was addressed directly to me, and I picked it up with trembling hands. I felt as if the paper weighed more than it should, as if it held a final, decisive move in a game I didn’t know we were playing.

Attorney Brenda arrived twenty minutes later carrying her briefcase and a bottle of wine. She had been my father’s legal counsel for decades, but she was also a dear friend who had known me since I was a child.

We locked ourselves in the study, which still smelled of the mild tobacco and old wood that always reminded me of my father. I sat in his large leather armchair while still clutching the unopened envelope in my hand.

“You didn’t want to open that alone, did you?” Brenda asked gently.

I shook my head because I was terrified of what Misty had hinted about my brother Jesse.

“Your father left very specific instructions, and some things were meant to be discovered only at the right time.”

I looked up at her with confusion.

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